Re: Windows Vista, Outlook 2k7 and RPC over HTTP
- From: "Gregg Hill" <bogus@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 10 Oct 2007 00:24:42 -0700
Read sentence #1 in my post.
"You may want to rephrase your replies to sound less confrontational."
You will get a better response. Try to remember that the help here is free
and supplied buy volunteers. Perhaps it's just me, but your replies to the
offered suggestions seem somewhat confrontational and unappreciated.
Yes, I see point #7, and even though you are technically correct, I think
you may still want to temper your responses.
Just thought I'd point that out to you.
Gregg Hill
--
----------------
DISCLAIMER WARNING: the information contained in any reply I make is merely
an OPINION, one that I hope you will consider when you make a choice as to
what you will do on your systems or network.
**No recommendation is to be implied by my OPINION.**
There, that should cover it!
"JEC" <thejohncarlson@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:CA9F0330-CBFC-4EE5-BA24-06E4D990CB3A@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Never mind. Found it myself. It appears you are correct if UAC is turned
on.
Read #7 in my original post.
"JEC" <thejohncarlson@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:F229858D-0D57-4EE2-A406-B8F9E76A940E@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Examples?
"Gregg Hill" <bogus@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:%23UnWUCrCIHA.748@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
You may want to rephrase your replies to sound less confrontational.
Colin was correct in that IE7, even when run as a local or domain
administrator, will not do certain things until you right-click its icon
and Run as Administrator.
Gregg Hill
--
----------------
DISCLAIMER WARNING: the information contained in any reply I make is
merely an OPINION, one that I hope you will consider when you make a
choice as to what you will do on your systems or network.
**No recommendation is to be implied by my OPINION.**
There, that should cover it!
"JEC" <thejohncarlson@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:582F966D-FBB3-4439-8E9D-28AFA8F4B0E6@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Wrong. Does not make any difference. I have tried it.
Aside from that, a member of the administrators group is an admin, no
matter what his account name is. As a matter of fact, the default load
of Vista does not even enable the administrator account, you must do it
manually.
I have confirmed this to be a problem on two seperate IBM machines. I
believe it is a problem with their load. I am on the phone with MS
support right now, if they cannot solve it I will reload the system
from scratch and let you know what happens.
"Colin" <Colin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:6C021F69-5EAC-4535-8EBC-52E072CA7EF0@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Hi,
Yes, even running as an admin account, you still need to tell IE7 to
run as
administrator - IE7 security.
Regards Colin.
"Dave Nickason [SBS MVP]" wrote:
Despite the fact that you're running as an admin, r-click IE and
choose Run
as Administrator. I'm not sure if Colin's right about this or not,
and I'm
going to test it, but I won't be able to do so until next week. I
had a
similar thing to what you describe on my home Vista desktop, but due
to time
limitations, I just switched to an already-configured XP box rather
than
troubleshoot it.
"JEC" <thejohncarlson@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:979859FC-5994-4A10-8C71-23A7C65F89C4@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Please read #6
"Colin" <Colin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:EB4E185A-A204-4ABA-A6C9-A3C14A17D1A0@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Hi,
Are you running IE 7 as administrator before you connect to RWW
and try
to
import the cert ?
Regards Colin.
"JEC" wrote:
I manage about a dozen SBS 2003 networks and have been using RPC
over
HTTP
with Self Signed SSL Certificates for quite some time. Now I am
being
force
fed some Windows Vista systems with Outlook 2007 installed. I
have made
it
work in several locations but I have a problem occuring on
multiple
systems
in multiple places. On a few of these Vista boxes I cannot get
the SSL
cert
to install from the SBS server. Here are the steps I have taken:
1. Add my RWW website to the trusted sites zone on the Vista box.
2. Reset all security zones to their default level.
3. Go to the web site and install the certificate to the Trusted
Root
Certifiication Authorities. It says "import successful". If you
immeditately
look in the list it will not be listed.
4. I have exported the certificate to a file and tried to import
it
manually. Same thing. "import successful", nothing in the list.
5. I have imported it and let it determine which store to put the
certificate in, it put it under "intermediate certification
authorities"
but
this did not allow Outlook to work. I removed it.
6. I have done all these steps using an account with
administrative
privliges.
7. I have perofrmed all these steps with User Account Control
turned
off.
No matter what, I get a message that says "import successful" and
it
clearly
is not.
Anyone else out there seen this? Any suggestions?
.
- References:
- Re: Windows Vista, Outlook 2k7 and RPC over HTTP
- From: JEC
- Re: Windows Vista, Outlook 2k7 and RPC over HTTP
- From: Dave Nickason [SBS MVP]
- Re: Windows Vista, Outlook 2k7 and RPC over HTTP
- From: Colin
- Re: Windows Vista, Outlook 2k7 and RPC over HTTP
- From: JEC
- Re: Windows Vista, Outlook 2k7 and RPC over HTTP
- From: Gregg Hill
- Re: Windows Vista, Outlook 2k7 and RPC over HTTP
- From: JEC
- Re: Windows Vista, Outlook 2k7 and RPC over HTTP
- From: JEC
- Re: Windows Vista, Outlook 2k7 and RPC over HTTP
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